Bowen v. Preferred Accident Insurance
This text of 68 A.D. 342 (Bowen v. Preferred Accident Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This action is to recover upon a policy of accident insurance issued by the defendant upon the life of the husband of the plaintiff. [343]*343The defense was that the assured stated and warranted in his application for the insurance that at the time thereof he was sixty years of age at his nearest birthday, and no more, which warranty was untrue and then known by the assured to be untrue, in that at the time of such application he was upwards of sixty-two years of age; and, further, that no action was begun upon the policy within the time limitation expressed therein. At the close of the charge to the jury, the learned counsel for the defendant stated that the only question that was to be submitted to the jury was that of the age of the assured ; that there was no question as to his deceit. The learned court so held and so stated to the jury.
The plaintiff in rebuttal offered in evidence a certain letter, dated May 15, 1890, and written to the assured by his deceased brother. In the letter was written: “ In reply to your inquiry about your age, I cannot tell you positively. Nor doe (sic) I know where the family register is. You must have been born in 1833, and are now 58 years old.” The learned counsel for the defendant objected to the reception of the letter on the ground that it was not evidence and was not shown to be in the said brother’s handwriting. After proof of the handwriting, the letter was received in evidence under exception. I am of opinion that the ruling was erroneous. The admission of such testimony must be justified by some rule or exception in derogation of the general rule that excludes hearsay testimony. The learned court did not state the grounds of its ruling, but as concededly the only question before the jury was the age of the testator, the letter must have been admitted on the ground that in this action age could be proved by hearsay. The learned counsel for the respondent seeks to maintain the ruling by citations from Phillipps on Evidence. Thus, the learned counsel says: “ The letter * * * was competent proof of the age of Jason Bowen within the rule stated by Phillipps. He says: ‘ Another subject whereon statements are receivable upon the credit of deceased persons who have neither been sworn to the truth of those statements, nor been cross-examined respecting them, relates to matters of pedigree,’ ” (1 Phillipps Ev. [C. & H. & E. notes] 248) and then continues with quotations which in express terms refer to cases of pedigree. The exception to the rule, or the rule itself (as some writers have it), that hearsay testimony is evidence in cases of pedi[344]*344grec, is ancient and unquestioned. (Pl. Ab. 293, Col. I; Thay. Ev. 520; Mima Queen v. Hepburn, 7 Cranch, 290; Eisenlord v. Clum, 126 N. Y. 552.) The error was due to the conclusion that a question of age is one of pedigree, or, perhaps, to the confusion of age with pedigree. A question of pedigree may, of course, involve a question of age; but a case which involves age is not necessarily one of pedigree. (Peckham, J., in Eisenlord v. Glum, supra, 566, citing Whittuck v. Waters, 4 C. & P. 375; Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Schwenk, 94 U. S. 593.) I think that this case, although involving the question of age, cannot be said to be one of pedigree so as to admit of such testimony. Stephen, in his Digest of the Law of Evidence (Art. 31, snbd. 1), qualifies the rule thus: “ Such declarations are deemed to be relevant only in cases in which the pedigree to which they relate is in issue, and not to cases in which it is only relevant to the issue.” Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Sehwenk (supra) was an action under a life insurance policy, and among the pleas of the defendant was a challenge of the age of the assured, as in the case at bar. In the course of the trial, the defendant, in order to prove that the age of the assured was different from that stated in the application for insurance, offered in evidence an entry in a minute book of an Odd Fellows lodge of which the deceased was a member, The court refused to admit the evidence and the defendant excepted. In passing upon the ruling, the court, per Strong, J., said: “ Again, it is argued that a man's age is one of the elements of his pedigree, and that, in proving pedigree, hearsay evidence is admitted. The argument is fallacious. It is true, the age of a person may become material in questions of pedigree; but even then the hearsay declaration of strangers, persons not related by blood or marriage, are
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
68 A.D. 342, 74 N.Y.S. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-preferred-accident-insurance-nyappdiv-1902.